Analysis of mercury species present during coal combustion by thermal desorption

[EN] Mercury in coal and its emissions from coal-fired boilers is a topic of primary environmental concern in the United States and Europe. The predominant forms of mercury in coal-fired flue gas are elemental (Hg0) and oxidized (Hg2+, primarily as HgCl2). Because Hg2+ is more condensable and far more water soluble than Hg0, the wide variability in mercury speciation in coal-fired flue gases undermines the total mercury removal efficiency of most mercury emission control technologies. It is important therefore to have an understanding of the behaviour of mercury during coal combustion and the mechanisms of mercury oxidation along the flue gas path. In this study, a temperature programmed decomposition technique was applied in order to acquire an understanding of the mode of decomposition of mercury species during coal combustion. A series of mercury model compounds were used for qualitative calibration. The temperature appearance range of the main mercury species can be arranged in increasing order as HgCl2 < HgS < HgO < HgSO4. Different fly ashes with certified and reference values for mercury concentration were used to evaluate the method. This study has shown that the thermal decomposition test is a newly developed efficient method for identifying and quantifying mercury species from coal combustion products.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: López Antón, María Antonia, Yuan, Yang, Perry, Ron, Maroto Valer, Mercedes
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2010-03
Subjects:Mercury, Mercurio, Thermal desorption, Coal combustion,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/84561
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